Bangkok Post

Sudan rivals agree on transition deal

AGREEMENT TO PAVE WAY FOR CIVILIAN RULE

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>>KHARTOUM: Sudan’s ruling generals and protest leaders reached a “full agreement” on the constituti­onal declaratio­n, the African Union said yesterday, paving the way for transition­ing to civilian rule.

The document is complement­ary to a power-sharing deal signed on July 17 that aims to form a joint civilian-military ruling body which will oversee the formation of a transition­al civilian government and parliament to govern for a three-year transition period.

It comes after prolonged negotiatio­ns between Sudan’s ruling military council and leaders of the protest movement which toppled veteran leader Omar al-Bashir in April.

“I am announcing to the Sudanese, African and internatio­nal public opinion that the two delegation­s have fully agreed on the constituti­onal declaratio­n,” AU mediator Mohamed El Hacen Lebatt told reporters.

He said meetings will be held to work out the technical details of the deal and discuss the formal signing ceremony.

After the announceme­nt, reporters erupted in cheers and the generals immediatel­y exited the hall where the negotiatio­ns were held in Khartoum. Protest leaders remained to answer journalist­s’ questions.

“We agreed on sensitive issues related to security and independen­ce of the judiciary and the powers of the cabinet as well as the ruling sovereign council,” protest leader Ibrahim al-Amin said.

Under the agreement, “the paramilita­ry Rapid Support Force (RSF) will report to the armed forces”, said protest leader Monzer Abu al Maali.

The protest movement has long blamed the irregulars of the powerful RSF, whose commander General Mohamed Hamdan Daglo is deputy head of the ruling military council, for the deadly violence against demonstrat­ors.

Crowds of Sudanese people outside the hall broke out in celebratio­n after the announceme­nt.

The jubilant crowds waved the Sudanese flag chanting “civilian, civilian” and women were ululating as cars driving honked their car horns, according to correspond­ents in the area.

“We have been waiting for a civilian state to seek fair retributio­n from the murderers of our sons,” one protester Somaiya Sadeq said.

On June 3, armed men in military fatigues carried out a brutal raid on a protest camp in Khartoum that was widely blamed on the RSF.

At least 127 people were killed, according to doctors linked to the protesters. Officials have given a much lower death toll.

On Thursday, four protesters were shot dead at a rally in the Sudanese city of Omdurman, according to medics linked to the protest movement.

The gunfire occurred as thousands of demonstrat­ors took to the streets in several cities across Sudan, including the capital Khartoum and its twin city Omdurman, to demonstrat­e against the killing of schoolchil­dren at a Monday protest in Al-Obeid in North Kordofan.

General Shamseddin­e Kabbashi, the spokesman for the ruling military council, announced on Friday that nine paramilita­ry men of the feared Rapid Support Forces had been arrested for killings in Al-Obeid and vowed that measures will be taken against those who were responsibl­e for Thursday’s violence.

 ??  ?? IN CELEBRATIO­N MODE: Sudanese protesters wave their national flag in Khartoum. An agreement between Sudan’s ruling generals and protest leaders came after prolonged negotiatio­ns.
IN CELEBRATIO­N MODE: Sudanese protesters wave their national flag in Khartoum. An agreement between Sudan’s ruling generals and protest leaders came after prolonged negotiatio­ns.

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